One of the Cabinet's most senior ministers has insisted Keir Starmer has full confidence in his anti-corruption minister Tulip Siddiq.
Treasury minister Tulip Siddiq is coming under increasing pressure over the way she used properties that were reportedly gifted to her. She has denied any wrongdoing.
When the anti-corruption minister is accused of corruption by a foreign government and has no prospect of being able to shut the story down any time soon, it is perfectly obvious that her position
Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch clash after Tulip Siddiq's resignation and inflation fall - PM faces questions over Tulip Siddiq’s resignation as Treasury minister
Sir Keir Starmer faced fresh calls from the Tories on Saturday to sack Ms Siddiq as a minister, as Bangladesh’s leader Muhammad Yunus called for an investigation into the properties to determine whether they were acquired through “plain robbery”.
This is a tale of two ex-ministers: the first ministerial casualties of Sir Keir Starmer's government, after just six months in power. Spot the difference. Louise Haigh, the crimson-haired left-wing former transport secretary, was thrown under the bus within hours of Sky News revealing a mobile phone fraud.
Keir Starmer is under pressurefrom the Tories to sack Tulip Siddiq after the minister was accused of corruption. Siddiq, the anti-corruption minister, is alleged to have been involved in brokering a deal with Russia for a nuclear power plant in Bangladesh ...
SIR Keir Starmer is defying calls to sack his embattled anti-corruption minister despite mounting pressure. Tulip Siddiq’s campaign materials were discovered among luxury items and confidential
Mel Stride says accusations over properties linked to former Bangladeshi regime have made it ‘really impossible’ for minister to do job
The Prime Minister has lost one of his best friends in Government, his judgement is in question and Kemi Badenoch has gained a 'scalp'
Bangladesh’s opposition leader has said he would push for Tulip Siddiq to be extradited amid corruption allegations linked to her despot aunt’s regime...
Badenoch goes on to say the Tories left him the fastest growing economy in the G7 and says jobs and growth are down, mortgage rates up and business confidence down. She asks if the country can afford four more years of Starmer's "terrible" judgement.